Chapter 131
The Understated Dragon Lord
Chapter 131 My Mistake
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Chapter 131 My Mistake
Staff brought over the POS machine to process Andrewâs payment for the stone. After a couple of beeps, the transaction was completed, and the receipt was printed out. Another staff member, equipped with tools, approached to crack open the stone.
Daniel glanced at the stone and warned Andrew with a chuckle, âAndrew, this soâcalled numberâone appraiser from Florida, Henry, right? Seems like heâs not that skilled. This stone will probably yield only some worthless jade fragments. If you spend 1.98 million on it, youâll likely lose about 1.9 million.â
âYou country boy, what do you know? Stop your bullshitting! Henry Jade is renowned for a reason. I donât believe he could make such a simple mistake,â Andrew retorted after swearing at Daniel.
Henry also stepped in on the discussion, âWho are you? What do you think youâre doing? You donât know
anything; I suggest you stop your illâinformed chatter. This stone, as I said to Andrew, should earn him a
return of at least 20-30%-and thatâs a conservative estimate. Once itâs cut open, it should reveal jade
worth over five million.â
âFive million? I tell you, once this stone is opened, youâll be crying on the spot, Andrew. This stone will
only reveal fragments worth maybe fifty thousand at most, if youâre lucky.â
As the staff began cutting the stone with a power saw, it split open to reveal its contents. What Henry and
everyone else expected was a sizeable piece of jade; however, looking at the revealed crossâsection, it
was clear there was no large jade piece. Instead, the stone was filled with fragments of poorâquality jade.
Although Andrew wasnât wellâversed in jade gambling, he knew garbage when he saw it. This stone was
full of worthless fragments, not the large jade piece Henry promised.
âHenry, whatâs going on?â Andrewâs first attempt was a failure. Looking visibly upset, Henry hadnât given up
yet. He instructed the staff, âCut it here again.â
Following Henryâs directions, the worker made another cutâbut the result was the same, just more
fragments.
âTry cutting in this direction.â
After several attempts, Henry finally resigned himself to despair.
With Henry falling silent, Andrew asked, âHenry, should we continue cutting?â
âMy mistake! I indeed made an error with this stone. I expected a large piece of jade, but all we found are fragments. Jade Gambling comes with risks, and even I cannot make the right choice every time. Though our first attempt failed, Iâm confident the next one will be better. You must trust me; Iâm a professional. Since youâve trusted me today to pick these stones, Iâll surely make you money.â
Frustrated with the first failure, Andrew found some logic in Henryâs explanation. Jade gambling was indeed risky; nobody could win every time. A firstâtime loss was understandable as long as the following choices recovered the initial investment.
Despite his loss, Andrew refused to be ridiculed by the country boy. Even if he lost, he wanted to ensure
Chapter 131 My Mistake
Daniel would fail too, to embarrass himself.
With a smug expres
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Andrew turned to Daniel, prompting him, âCountry boy, itâs your turn to play. Of
course, if youâre too scared, feel free to just admit defeat